Carmichael’s Concise Review Coming Events
Due to COVID-19, please check to see if the listed events have been postponed or canceled.
2022
72nd American Crystallographic Association (ACA) Annual Meeting July 29–August 3, 2022
Portland, OR
acas.memberclicks.net/future-meetings
Microscopy & Microanalysis 2022 July 31–August 4, 2022
Portland, OR
www.microscopy.org/events/future.cfm
Imaging, Diffraction and Crystallography – Where John Spence’s Legacy Leads Us October 11–13, 2022
Tempe, AZ
phy.asu.edu/spencesymp
XVI CIASEM Congress: 16th Inter-American Congress on Microscopy October 25–28, 2022
Oaxaca, Mexico and Virtual
ciasem2022.com
Neuroscience 2022 November 12–16, 2022
San Diego, CA
www.sfn.org/meetings/neuroscience-2022
2022 MRS Fall Meeting November 27–December 2, 2022
Boston, MA and December 6–8, 2022 Virtual
mrs.org/meetings-events/fall-meetings- exhibits/2022-mrs-fall-meeting-exhibit
Cell Bio 2022 December 3–7, 2022 Washington, DC
www.ascb.org/cellbio2022
2023
Microscopy & Microanalysis 2023 July 24–28, 2023 Minneapolis, MN
www.microscopy.org/events/future.cfm
2024
Microscopy & Microanalysis 2024 July 28–August 1, 2024 Cleveland, OH
www.microscopy.org/events/future.cfm
Figure 1: SEM of the distal (D) part showing wedge-shaped tissues with highly dense mushroom-shaped microstructures (scale bar = 1 mm). The enlarged portion shows the mushroom-shaped micropillared arrangement (scale bar = 100 μm) with the single mushroom top indicated as MT (scale bar = 10 μm) containing nanopores (NP) and nanobeads (NB) (scale bar = 1 μm). SEM of proximal (P) region (scale bar = 1 μm) shows the corresponding MT imprints indicated as MTI (scale bar = 100 μm). The single MTI (scale bar = 10 μm) shows a planar topology (scale bar = 1 μm).
8 doi:10.1017/S1551929522000815 2022 July
Microscopy Reveals How a Lizard Can Lose its Tail
Stephen W. Carmichael Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN 55905
carmichael.stephen@
mayo.edu
Lizards can famously shed their tails when under threat from pursuing predators.
Te discarded tail, oſten wiggling, can distract the predator, allowing the lizard to survive the encounter. Self-amputation is known as autotomy and is a common defense strategy in lizards, salamanders, crustaceans, spiders, and other animals. Tis raises the important question of how does a lizard retain its tail during normal activities that
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